The Mission I’m On

At my core, I feel a deep sense of moral and ethical responsibility to help others.

This is my compass and my “why.” I come from a privileged background, I recognize it, and I feel a strong obligation to contribute something meaningful in the time that I have.

I care a lot about people, and I care a lot about the environment that surrounds and connects us. 

The essence of the mission I am on is this

  1. To help alleviate some of the emotional and physical suffering in people’s lives (including my own) — from my family, neighbors, and friends, to the poorest people in the world. 
  2. To help shift the culture from viewing climate change as an impossible problem to solve, to viewing it as a solvable problem— and to inspire as many people as I can to wake up every day and get to work solving it. 
  3. To become the loving witness of my fears, desires, needs and dreams. And to act ethically and compassionately as I move through the world.  

Here are some ways in which I currently go about moving my mission forward.

1. Alleviating suffering

For my family, neighbors, and friends

    • Promoting mindfulness. Self-love. And compassion.
    • Being there when it counts for the people I care for.  
    • Smiling to strangers, and engaging in conversation with them.
    • Showing people they are not alone, that we’re in this together. That we’re all experiencing pain. That we can learn to be with it. And that as we do, it can even alleviate some of the pain. 

For the poorest people in the world

2. Changing perspectives on climate change

I publish a bi-monthly newsletter on the latest innovations in clean technology called Cleantech Rising. Zoheb Davar and I have been publishing this for over 3 years, creating content to teach and inspire action in the lives of people who are passionate about protecting the environment.

3. Becoming a loving witness

I practice loving kindness and mindfulness meditation as a way to soften and open up to the full spectrum of the human experience.

I’ll let Jack explain this below as he can do a much better job than I.

If you don’t want to listen to the whole talk, you can find the bullet points here.

“The cover letter you wrote is what got you the job.” -The guys that just hired me

The co-founders of the content marketing agency I’ve been working for recently told me that the cover letter I wrote was what got me the job.

I’ve been in a unique position to take what might look like risks in my cover letters over the past couple of years, and I’ve landed a number of interviews with these cover letters by being a little bold and edgy, even when I knew the work experience I had to show probably wasn’t where it needed to be to be the stand out candidate for these jobs.

Because my approach has been working well, I thought I’d break down the cover letter that I wrote recently and talk about why I did certain things that added up to something that really compelled the people I sent it to. 

Enjoy!

Note: The sound is on the quiet side for the first couple minutes, and then it gets better. 

The Joy of Missing Out (JOMO)

We’ve all felt it. That unpleasant feeling of becoming aware of all the amazing things we’re missing out on. Yep, I’m talking about FOMO.

Having to choose from the ever growing options of the places we can go, the people we can see, the work we can do, and the things we can experience feels painful sometimes.

It brings up too many questions of am I doing the right things? Am I spending my time well? Look at all these amazing things my friends are doing! What am I doing with my life?!

Continue reading The Joy of Missing Out (JOMO)

The extent to which we’re all struggling

Below is a Facebook post that I wrote in 2016. 

It was about me realizing that everyone I encounter, whether they show it on the surface or not, is going through something challenging. It was a reminder to myself to have empathy and compassion when interacting with the people that I come across in day to day life.

Continue reading The extent to which we’re all struggling